While this is one of my favourite Disney movies, I have just purchased the DVD after YEARS of waiting and will be returning it promptly -- until the day Disney decides to use some of their money to put out *quality* products. Let's face it... the Disney company must have enough money to rule the world by now. They own several resorts, a cruise line, a town called Celebration, an island in the Bahamas... so that begs the question... why are their special effects so cheap and how could they do such a terrible job transferring this movie to DVD? Did we rush this DVD out just to make more cash without putting in an effort? I dunno... the other special features seem pretty good. But you don't have to be a technical wizard of any kind to notice the spot (during both the special edition AND theatrical versions) where the layers switch and Mufasa's voice is actually blacked out during his sentence. His lips move... but nothing comes out. The scene occurs approx 11 minutes into the movie, where Zazu delivers the morning report. Whether you're watching the spoken or sung version, right after the "pounce", a freeze-frame that switches DVD layers causes the background laughter, sound effects and Mufasa to be muted, taking it from "That was very good!" to a disappointing "...ry good". Even the children made sour faces and asked: "What was that?" Instead of explaining the challenges of the DVD-making process, I think I'll just wait until Disney learns how to cut movie properly. These switches are usually done between scenes or at a pause in the scene where viewers don't notice. But then THIS coming from a studio that claimed it was an original story when anyone familiar with Shakespeare will tell you it's Hamlet... much as Lion King II was Romeo and Juliet. As always, the movie itself gets ten stars, but the DVD gets ZERO as far as I'm concerned.